COLONIE — Tamera M. Jason will be heading to the Albany County jail on Thursday to begin serving a four-month incarceration for driving while intoxicated.

But she’s not going quietly.

She’s calling out Albany County Family Court Judge Gerard E. Maney.

And she’s calling him many things — hypocritical and arrogant, for starters — after the judge’s own run-in with the state’s drunken-driving laws. Although their two cases are unrelated and not equal infractions, Jackson’s comments highlight what some perceive as two tiers of justice between the powerful and the powerless.

“Who is he to be judging me about my DWI?” asked Jackson, 30, who was convicted of DWI after a March 5 incident in which she was stopped by State Police driving the wrong way on Interstate 787 in Menands and also charged with unlawful possession of marijuana. She registered a 0.14 percent blood alcohol level in a Breathalyzer test.

She later tested positive for marijuana while on probation and chose to do the jail time instead of an additional three years’ probation on the DWI conviction.

“I’m accepting responsibility for what I did and I’m paying my penalty to society,” she said. “I didn’t turn around on the bridge, use mouthwash and make calls to get out of a DWI, like Judge Maney did.”

Although her DWI conviction was in another court, Jackson has appeared in Maney’s Family Court nearly 50 times during a long and bitter custody battle over her 10-year-old daughter. Jackson said her encounters with Maney have grown increasingly tense and she claims he no longer allows her to speak in his court.

Through a court spokesman, Maney said that he cannot discuss any pending matters before him in Family Court.